The Story of Birds — the mystery of their evolution from dinosaurs - FT中文网
登录×
电子邮件/用户名
密码
记住我
请输入邮箱和密码进行绑定操作:
请输入手机号码,通过短信验证(目前仅支持中国大陆地区的手机号):
请您阅读我们的用户注册协议隐私权保护政策,点击下方按钮即视为您接受。
FT商学院

The Story of Birds — the mystery of their evolution from dinosaurs

What’s the link between a T-Rex and a farmyard chicken? Steve Brusatte reveals all in his enjoyable tour of evolutionary science
00:00
{"text":[[{"start":6.8,"text":"Birds are dinosaurs. This is one of those facts that you are sure is true but are not entirely sure why. The problem is this: the theory of evolution is deceptively simple. Like all great scientific theories, its genius is hidden beneath a superficial layer of accessibility (perhaps none more so than evolution), and to understand it fully requires careful extrication by a talented and experienced guide. "}],[{"start":33.1,"text":"Steve Brusatte, a professor of palaeontology and evolution at the University of Edinburgh, is abler than most to construct a readable narrative out of a seemingly insurmountable agglomeration of facts. Take his The Rise and Fall of the Dinosaurs (2018): 250mn years and hundreds of thousands of characters condensed into one volume of some 400 pages. In his new book The Story of Birds, he repeats the trick, and manages to “organize and focus 150 million years of evolution into a coherent story”. "}],[{"start":64.75,"text":"Of course, it helps that dinosaurs are endlessly fascinating. Put the facts in any order and people will read them. You may ask whether we need to know about the dinosaurian ancestry of birds to appreciate them. But this is no shameless exploitation of our fascination with monsters and mystery. Why? First, because the fact that “the leg of a barnyard chicken is a miniature version of any T. rex leg you see in a museum” is nothing less than incredible. Second, advances in the field of genetics mean that scientific speculation about the fossil record is becoming less hedged, thus enriching the present research, as this book shows. "}],[{"start":101.65,"text":"An obvious question presents itself: what is a bird? Here the complexity and simplicity of evolution meet. Sure, “if you were to ask this question about living animals, the answer would be obvious”. But things “start to blur when we look back into the fossil record”. "}],[{"start":null,"text":"

Why some birds survived when other dinosaurs died is ‘one of the most exciting mysteries in paleontology’

"}],[{"start":117.35000000000001,"text":"The important thing “is the process of evolution . . . in which one subgroup of small dinosaurs developed the ability to flap their wings, overcome gravity, and ascend into the skies, and then — unlike all other dinosaur groups that had feathers and might have independently evolved flight — survived”. It is in this sense that birds are dinosaurs. Thus the many characteristic features of modern birds — intelligence, complex social structures, feathers, flight, song — can be traced back to this dinosaur subgroup, the coelurosaurs. In particular to the “matriarch of all birds alive today”, the 150mn-year old archaeopteryx. "}],[{"start":156.75,"text":"From this “oldest and most primitive species of true bird”, Brusatte explains how this seemingly insignificant line favoured feathers and smaller bodies, thus beginning the “march to endothermy”. That is, to the warmbloodedness and consistently high metabolic rate unique to birds and mammals. An evolutionary advantage that (perhaps) explains “one of the most exciting mysteries in paleontology”: why some birds survived when other dinosaurs died. "}],[{"start":null,"text":"
"}],[{"start":184.6,"text":"Yet survive they did, and what a story: they became the superior intelligence in the immediate post-dinosaur world; defeated the reptilian pterosaurs and gained aerial dominion; in some cases returned to land (eg, ostriches) or to the water (eg, penguins); and continually redefine our encrusted standards of non-human ingenuity. "}],[{"start":206.54999999999998,"text":"That there is still any doubt about the origins of birds, as Brusatte suggests, seems little more than a (reassuring) sign of human perversity, such is the weight and variety of evidence — although he does not offer any alternative arguments. Even poor arguments would be enjoyable, and surely worthy of discussion. After all, falsification is the essence of science."}],[{"start":228.24999999999997,"text":"The popular appeal of Brusatte’s work might have something to do with this absence of debate. Simplicity is his skill but at times it reads rather like a children’s book. Especially when he offers us his speculative fiction. Great synthesiser of evidence, yes; great writer of unimaginative cliché, also yes (“with a burst of energy, the dinosaur leapt from its hiding place”)."}],[{"start":251.24999999999997,"text":"But these are minor grievances, and I am not a best-selling author. Besides, any serious book about the wonder of evolution is worth your time, such are nature’s “endless forms most beautiful”; and birds are indeed “some of the most remarkable creatures that have ever lived”. Oh, and they are dinosaurs, you know."}],[{"start":270.54999999999995,"text":"The Story of Birds: An Evolutionary History of the Dinosaurs that Live Among Us by Steve Brusatte Picador £25, 448 pages"}],[{"start":280.69999999999993,"text":"Join our online book group on Facebook at FT Books Café and follow FT Weekend on Instagram, Bluesky and X"}],[{"start":297.6499999999999,"text":""}]],"url":"https://audio.ftcn.net.cn/album/a_1780712392_2645.mp3"}
版权声明:本文版权归FT中文网所有,未经允许任何单位或个人不得转载,复制或以任何其他方式使用本文全部或部分,侵权必究。

从亚里士多德看AI赋能的量化投资

出乎意料的是,据一位经纪人称,答案并非“一无所有”。

联邦安全局如何切断俄罗斯与互联网的连接

多次断网迫使这个全球“触网”最深的国家重新依赖现金、纸质地图和宠物摄像头。

量子计算革命比你想象的更近

许多公司押注这一领域将对制药业、金融服务业和加密货币产生重大影响,但怀疑者担心这只是一场炒作。

德国欲斥资1000亿欧元确保列车准点运行

该国铁路基础设施的更新,将成为检验这一欧洲最大经济体能否扭转多年来下滑局面的首次考验。

美国正按自己的方式重塑足球

大量美元资金涌入,使美国成为这项运动中最具影响力的力量之一。

研究:英国有逾100万个余额超过5万英镑的无息账户

许多储户可能没有意识到,把如此大笔金额存放在无息账户中会损失多少收益。这会使持有人在通胀侵蚀面前暴露无遗。
设置字号×
最小
较小
默认
较大
最大
分享×